Between Man and God: Issues in Judaic ThoughtSicker presents a personal attempt to come to grips with the awesome question, Where was God at Auschwitz? and with it some of the related central issues of Jewish thought and belief. There is a tendency among many writers of contemporary work of theology to argue that the very fact of the Holocaust invalidates traditional Jewish theory and that its long-held ideas about God must therefore be revised radically. However, Jewish thinkers have long asked the equivalent of this troubling question, albeit in reference to other places and times in Israel's history and have offered possible answers, just as we do today. The big difference between then and now is not the enormity of the Holocaust, but the readiness of earlier thinkers to search for meaning without almost cavalierly discarding traditionally cherished ideas and beliefs. |
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Contents
The Judaic Conception of God | 1 |
The Temporal or Prophetic Paradigm | 21 |
The Experience of the Divine | 41 |
Man the Universe and the Creator | 57 |
The Meaning of Human Existence | 75 |
Man in the Image | 89 |
Man and Providence | 97 |
Mans Moral Autonomy | 109 |
The Good and Evil Impulses | 129 |